Tuesday 29 March 2016

MEMORABLE VAN AND TRAILER TRIP ( Tales from France)



 

MEMORABLE VAN AND TRAILER TRIP --- SEPT 2008

This is the follow up story to “Digby Locked us out”!


Background
My episode with a snapped Achilles tendon in February accelerated my retirement with the horses; it also held up any travel to France.
The 14 weeks with plaster and inflatable boots; all the time using elbow crutches
had been thoroughly frustrating!!

Then even when free of encumbrances, no driving, no cycling etc etc. for even more time!
Consequently, I could not get any of my usual lorry driving work during the pea harvest season in June / July. The leg was not fit enough for every day driving.

Eventually, the first trip to France with (03) Citroen relay van and trailer was in June with Sister Jane driving as I had not yet been cleared by the hospital.

Second trip with van and trailer was at the beginning of September.

This was actually the fourth large trailer journey to our new French home.
The first two had been with the horse centre 3.5 ton twin axle low loader pulled by Ruth’s elderly VW Passat estate car.
Journey one with the new (second hand) furniture, cooker etc all carefully wrapped in canvas sheeting had been four years earlier and coincided with finally purchasing the house.
The second had been a few months later with a load of useful wood and metal, other bits and pieces, plus horse manure, underneath the Ferguson tractor which I had persuade Ruth would be invaluable in its new home lifting and moving things too heavy for me on my own.
That Ferguson trip had nearly ended our marriage.
The total load was quite heavy and would not make it up that steep ramp onto the boat at Portsmouth. Half way up, the car decided it had had enough and I had to push Ruth out of the car and hold the whole load on the foot brake while she ran off to find the deck officer and his whole deck crew of able bodied men to push the car and trailer the rest of the way.
Ruth would not let me forget this incident; especially when on arriving at our new home, Roger who had sold us the house took more interest in the tractor than he did in her. The fact that he had spent his working life repairing tractors made no difference.

All these incidents meant that our “trailer journeys” had earned some notoriety!
Every time we left, Terena and Geoff asked if “I had not got room for just something else. Was I sure I had not left some small space unused somewhere?”

So this was trailer journey four and the second with the Citroen Relay, its doggy and perhaps “dodgy” passengers and twin axle “Blue Line” all galvanised, long, 3.5 ton heavy duty trailer I had purchased second-hand, on eBay, in February, to complete our move to France.

Calamity
We were almost half way to Portsmouth and began negotiating the ring road around Northampton. At one particular spot this involves a difficult steep hill - approach to traffic lights on a large round - about system involving six roads and a flyover.
We tried to crawl up the hill to the lights and hope they would change before we had to stop. I really did not fancy a hill start with the van fully loaded and trailer behind resembling “Noah’s ark” in a panic!

It was not to be and we ended up behind a very slow car and caravan.
They were even slower on the hill start than me; frustration took a hand and I decided to change gear to pass while I had more “urge” than the caravan.

There was an unpleasant shriek and judder from our gearbox, what we found out later to be caused by several fingers from the clutch cover plate breaking off and jamming themselves between the flywheel and clutch driven plate.

We were about 100 miles from our old home in Lincolnshire and 120 miles from the ferry at Portsmouth.
The smell of burning clutch and this high pitched squeal told me something had gone severely awry.
What to do next?
Ruth was beginning to realise that things were not all as they should be. My mind was topsy turvey with what to do next. Seconds ticked by and we were still going forward, now on a straight, flat piece of road.

The clutch was still working. We came to some more traffic lights, changed down a gear, round another island and we were going downhill.
This gave me chance to test the working movements.
Clutch pedal was ok and had free movement so I tried a couple of quick jabs.
Within a matter of moments it seemed, the smell was clearing and the constant squeal was stopped.
At the same time as trying to assess the clutch situation and make split second decisions, I was trying to reassuring Ruth that all was not lost.

She could see huge complications with missing the ferry. Especially with three dogs in the van, surrounded by masses of furniture and other bits and pieces.
The trailer was carrying sufficient wood to build extra flooring above the caravan stored in our big shed beside the house there in France. The storage was badly needed to contain the overflow of books and furniture.
Basically the difference between the four bedroom house in UK and our far smaller, two bedroom bungalow type “new” home in France.
More minutes passed and to my complete surprise we were still going. By the time we had passed under the M1, I had managed to persuade Ruth that although everything was not as it should be, we were still on course for Portsmouth.

In the moments after the smell died away I had decided to go on. There seemed no point in turning round for home, loosing the ferry booking and far worse encuring Ruth’s wrath; when we could just as well keep going in the direction we preferred. Particularly as we had now completed almost half the journey and the worst half at that.

Ahead of us was about 140 miles of dual carriageway with far fewer gear changes. We had a chance.
There was still a constant whining from the clutch but not loud. Nothing like we had encountered back at Northampton.
We made it to the half way coffee stop just before the M40.

Keeping Calm
By now Ruth had begun using the herbal remedy she mixed up to calm the dogs on this journey, on herself!
It worked though; her constant worry about not arriving at Portsmouth in time to catch the boat was now under control. In fact we were only about 15 minutes behind our normal journey time.
Leaving the M40 to join the A34 brought us up another incline to more traffic lights. This time luck was with us and we forged on. Not exactly smoothly, but in the right direction and with sufficient speed to keep us on schedule.

We made it to Portsmouth with a grinding, whining each time the clutch operated!

But it did work even if protesting.
On to the ferry and six hours rest and sleep. Boy, did I need that rest!

In France at last
Six hours later, we were off the ferry and negotiating the ring road around Caen.
More round-abouts, slip roads and flyovers, but very little traffic as it was by now 10pm.

We had to negotiate about 100 miles of winding country roads now, until the motorway began at Alencon. Lots of gear changes which could not be avoided.
The noises each time became more of a protest and confirmed to us that the motorway was our only option for the final 100 miles.
Ruth began asking awkward questions. “What happens if the clutch stops working? Can it break completely?” She was obviously very worried and needed my reassurance.
I worked hard concentrating on changing gear as gently as possible and at the same time explaining to her the workings of the clutch and what was happening or rather what I thought was happening beneath our feet.

We came to Argenton and to save a few miles worked our way through the town centre rather than the longer winding ring road.
By now the motorway could not come soon enough.

Everything was quite normal and performing well except for the clutch.
Even the weather was in our favour. It was a clear night, no fog and no rain. The sky was full of stars and the moon gleamed down from just ahead as if showing us the way.
I was confident from the way the van was running that even if the clutch stopped working we would still be able to keep going.
Actually changing gear would present problems, but we should manage to proceed in the direction we most desired.

Finally locked up
We eventually arrived at the motorway barrier at Alencon to collect our ticket. Just 100 miles to go.
With ticket safe in hand I pressed in the clutch pedal to select first gear and surprise, surprise, no clutch.
The whole thing had locked up solid.

It had lasted just long enough to get onto the straight clear road with no interruptions. We just had to get on it!

Fortunately the Citroen Relay van has a very low first gear. We first realised this when Jane took us up the hugely steep ramp at Portsmouth into the boat in June. The van had sailed up effortlessly, complete with trailer load of wood and my car.

Now we needed that particular characteristic to help us again. I lowered the engine revs a much as I could and forced the gear lever into first position.
It worked; with just a slight crunch and a jerk we were on our way again.
All I had to do was match engine speed with gearbox revolutions and the gears changed relatively smoothly.

In the “good old days”, before all gearboxes had synchromesh on all gears,
this method of driving was not unusual. With a non synchro gearbox, you had to depress the clutch twice for each change. Once for out of gear and once again for into the next. If you matched the engine speed with a quick blip of the throttle you could select your next gear without a clutch at all. With practice.

Now the fact that I was getting “grey and wrinkly” and been driving all kinds of vehicles for over 48 years was paying off!

We had to negotiate two motorway links on the journey, which meant changing down a gear each time. Luck was certainly with us, and so was that constant whine.
On removing the gear box later in the week we found that the whine was actually what was left of the clutch cover plate and its remaining fingers chewing away at the clutch actuator lever at the very back of the gearbox. The thing that moves backwards and forwards making the clutch engage and disengage.

When we took it out there was very little of this left. There was no clutch thrust bearing at all; just a few ball bearings rattling around in the bell housing behind the gearbox.
The clutch driven plate itself, the thing that moves in and out to allow gear changes, was not in bad condition except for huge chunks ripped out of its facing by the fingers from the back plate.

Inside the clutch housing, the actuator lever moves forward and pushes a revolving bearing onto the back plate where a circle of sprung fingers then disengage the driven plate from the flywheel which is fastened to the back of the engine.
What had happened was three of those sprung fingers had snapped off and flown though between the driven plate and flywheel fortunately not damaging it.
The revolving bearing had jammed into the remaining fingers and gradually chewed itself to tiny pieces. This was the beginning of the whining.
At Alencon, this had disintegrated completely and stopped forward and backward movement of the actuator lever.

The last lap
Back on the motorway it was by now 2.45 am and we approached the pay kiosk at Vivy; just seven miles from our new home at Varennes sur Loire.
One last crunch and lurch and off again on the very last lap!
More slowly this time as we were back on country roads. Careful gear changes now so as not to spoil our luck.
We finally pulled into the courtyard outside our new home at 3.15 am.
All totally exhausted mentally and physically except the dogs who had behaved perfectly and now were overjoyed to be home.

A deadline
Replacing the clutch, was the first time I had worked on a front wheel drive!
What a pain. From the very beginning it was difficult.
Things that should have been loose were tight and things that should have been accessible were certainly not!

Neighbour Mike who runs a B and B with wife Tracey was marvellous.
Without his strength and encouragement I could not have completed the job.
I had a deadline. The van was booked onto a ferry back to the UK the very next week. I was going on my own this time to collect another load of “property” and bring Sister Jane and her husband David back with me for a short break.

I had found clutch replacement kits on UK eBay for about £120 but could just not run the risk of them not being perfectly, exactly what I needed and having to change them. There just was not the time.

I sourced the bits in Saumur but the price was just short of 300 Euros! This included five gallons of gear oil and 25% discount obtained for me by a retired Belgian mechanic friend at Montsoreau who has a sailing boat.
I also needed a tool to remove the bottom ball joint on the suspension. Something you do not need very often but had given some thought to buying from time to time in the UK. I wish I had; as what would have cost me about £15 in UK cost me 40 Euros in Saumur!
Big discount motor accessory shops do not exist here.

Re assembling the clutch was quite simple. Too simple I thought. Things seem so flimsy today compared with the 1960’s.
Perhaps it was the fact that the last clutch I had done was just last year and in the horse centre 7.5 ton Leyland lorry that needed a JCB digger to lift and help locate the gearbox.

Three days on my back
Back with the Citroen van, the worst part was trying to get the right hand drive shaft into the gearbox at same time as the clutch spline. It took me a whole day to do just that!

Unlike a simple vehicle with rear wheel drive; the transverse, front wheel drive engines have a differential (the system that allows both driven wheel to turn independently) fastened onto the gearbox, thereby doubling its weight.
The rear wheel drive has its differential in the back axle.

The day I was struggling to line up these two shafts on different sides of the gearbox, into different splines, all at the same time, I telephone David to explain how I was progressing, or not!
He explained that his good friend Tony in Lincoln worked on vans all day every
day. Perhaps it was worth giving him a call.
I caught Tony home for lunch.
He was quite surprised that I had not dropped the whole front axle from the vehicle as that is they way he does it to improve access.
He was even more surprised that I had got the gearbox out and in again without doing this.
Perhaps it was because I had been crawling around on by back in the sand of my “workshop” floor with the van just inches above my nose. The gearbox had been lowered and raised on a trolley jack running on plywood sheeting allowing just sufficient room to clear the bottom of the van.
There was no alternative he confirmed. If I did not want to remove the whole of the right hand suspension I would just have to continue jiggling and pushing until the two things came together.
Eventually they did. But lesson learned; next time I will take the thing completely to pieces. It will be quicker in the long run!
Relocating the gear change cables demanded extra concentration but eventually even this worked out.

I made the deadline and double journey, returning once more with a van load and full trailer behind. Trailer load number five.

I must add that there was a nervous moment approaching those traffic lights at the top of that hill on the ring road round Northampton!

Ends
Copyright KS 2009

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